Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Waxahachie Daily Light started publishing in 1867 and it is the only paper serving Ellis County that started before 1900 and is still operating today. [2] Though papers such as the Waxahachie Argus, the Enterprise, and the Telegraph preceded the Waxahachie Daily Light, by 1917 only the Enterprise and the Daily Light were still in operation.
Animation of reports during the flying disc craze. Over 800 reports were made publicly during the 1947 flying disc craze. [1] [2] [3] Such reports quickly spread throughout the United States, and some sources estimate the reports may have numbered in the thousands.
Waxahachie (/ ˌ w ɒ k s ə ˈ h æ tʃ i / WOK-sə-HATCH-ee) is the county seat of Ellis County, Texas, United States.Its population was 41,140 in 2020. [8] The city was founded in 1850, and incorporated in 1871.
KBEC (1390 kHz) is a commercial AM and FM radio station licensed to Waxahachie, Texas and serving Ellis County. It is owned by Jon and Alyssa Garrett and it carries a classic country/Texas country radio format with some talk and sports shows. Programming is also heard on 250-watt FM translator K256DE at 99.1 MHz in Waxahachie.
Recognized as "the oldest town in Texas," Nacogdoches derived its name from a Caddo Indian tribe. Despite occasional confusion with the pronunciation "Nah-cog-DOW-chess," locals commonly say "Nack ...
Sportspeople from Waxahachie, Texas (20 P) Pages in category "People from Waxahachie, Texas" The following 24 pages are in this category, out of 24 total.
The Bowie News: Bowie: 1922 Wednesday / Saturday 3,717 Kinney County Post: Brackettville: 2010 Thursday 957 Brady Standard-Herald: Brady: 1909 Wednesday 1,460 Breckenridge American: Breckenridge: Moser Community Media 1920 Wednesday 503 Brenham Banner-Press: Brenham: Hartman Newspapers, L.P. 1866 Sunday / Tuesday / Thursday 3,121 Brownfield ...
Mitchell found a position in New Mexico working with the developmentally disabled. Galle, who said in 2010 that the case had "derailed our careers", [11] entered early retirement. [18] Galle and Mitchell earned the Dean's Advocacy Award from the Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center in 2010. [3] Wiley left Winkler County for Lubbock.